Oil markets jumped over one percent on Friday after President Trump issued a blunt warning to Tehran as fresh shipping incidents around the Strait of Hormuz continued to unsettle global energy traders.
Brent crude futures climbed $1.32, or 1.25%, to $107.04 a barrel in early Asian trading, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate rose $1.33, or 1.31%, to $102.50, levels not seen with such consistency since the early days of the Iran conflict.
For the week, Brent has gained nearly 6%, and WTI has surged more than 7%, reflecting deepening market anxiety over the fragile state of a ceasefire that few analysts appear to trust.
Speaking in an interview aired Thursday night on Fox News, President Trump left little ambiguity about his diminishing tolerance for the ongoing standoff. “I am not going to be much more patient,” he said bluntly. “They should make a deal.”
The remarks landed with immediate force in global energy markets, which have grown increasingly sensitive to every diplomatic signal emanating from Washington, Tehran, and Beijing. Traders read the statement as a potential precursor to renewed military pressure, a scenario that could inflame an already volatile supply outlook.
The geopolitical backdrop was further complicated by the high-profile two-day state visit between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, which wrapped up Friday amid considerable fanfare, bilateral business deals, and, notably, no breakthrough on Iran.
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, speaking Friday morning to Bloomberg, offered a measured assessment of China’s posture. Beijing, he said, was being “very pragmatic” about its involvement with Iran and had a clear national interest in keeping the Strait of Hormuz open, a waterway through which a significant proportion of China’s energy imports flow.
In one notable signal from the summit, Trump revealed that China had expressed a desire to purchase American oil, a development that could reshape energy trade flows if formalized. The White House also confirmed that the two leaders had agreed on the shared need to keep the Strait open to international shipping.
But analysts were quick to note that agreement in principle is far removed from actionable diplomatic resolution.
“With the Beijing summit not delivering any breakthrough on Iran, market focus is back on the deadlock and a blockaded Strait, with a tail risk of renewed military escalation,” said Vandana Hari, founder of Singapore-based oil market intelligence firm Vanda Insights. Her words captured the prevailing mood: cautious, watchful, and deeply uncertain.
The geopolitical rhetoric has been matched blow for blow by alarming developments on the water. On Thursday, Iranian personnel were reported to have seized a vessel in waters off the United Arab Emirates, redirecting it toward Iranian territorial waters, the latest in a pattern of maritime confrontations that have sent insurance premiums and freight costs spiraling across the region.
The day before, an Indian cargo vessel transporting livestock from Africa to the UAE was sunk in waters off the coast of Oman, an incident that drew swift condemnation from shipping industry associations and renewed calls for international naval escorts through the Persian Gulf corridor.
These incidents have compounded fears of a full chokehold on one of the world’s most critical energy arteries. Roughly 20% of globally traded oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz on any given day, making any sustained disruption a potential shock to the global economy.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards sought to project an image of normalcy on Friday, stating that approximately 30 vessels had transited the Strait of Hormuz since Wednesday evening.
While Tehran appeared to frame this as evidence of continued access, the figure did little to ease market concerns. Before the outbreak of hostilities, the Strait saw roughly 140 vessel crossings per day—meaning current throughput remains at less than a quarter of pre-war levels.
Analysts noted that while 30 crossings marked a meaningful uptick from the near-paralysis of recent days, the number falls dramatically short of what global supply chains require to function normally.
Tanker operators, energy importers, and commodities desks around the world will be watching closely to see whether the figure climbs or collapses in the days ahead.
With diplomatic channels straining, shipping lanes under threat, and a U.S. president running short of patience, the conditions for further oil price volatility appear firmly in place.
The question traders are now asking is not whether the market will remain reactive to every development in the Persian Gulf; it clearly will, but whether any actor has both the incentive and the leverage to pull the situation back from the brink before it deteriorates further.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
President Trump’s thinly veiled threat toward Iran, combined with ongoing ship seizures and a Strait of Hormuz operating at less than a quarter of its normal capacity, has pushed oil prices to their highest weekly gains in months.
The Beijing summit between Trump and Xi, despite its diplomatic pageantry, produced no concrete resolution on Iran — leaving markets with nothing but uncertainty to price in.


















